Jump to content
Post-Update: Forum Issues Read more... ×
BPAL Madness!
Sign in to follow this  
  • entries
    91
  • comments
    133
  • views
    23,917

Should I be worried?

Sign in to follow this  
dawndie

466 views

In our mail on Wednesday was a collection notice addressed to me, for what looked to be a landline phone number in Southern California as I recognized the area code. This collection agency wants almost $900!

 

I am not worried because:

--although we lived in SoCal previously, we moved to Ohio in July 1995 (and paid all our utilities, AFAIK. We certainly didn't leave no $900 phone bill :D)

--Regardless, statute of limitations on an old utility bill is 7 years max

--I don't recognize the phone number as one of our old ones

--we were never contacted by the actual phone company, just this collection agency purporting to represent the phone company

--I check our credit reports every few months and there have never been any weird charges or accounts popping up

 

However, I am worried because:

--my name is fairly unique and have never heard of anyone else with the same name. Is someone using my name? :)

--the collection agency might start reporting this on my credit (which has no other blemishes) and wreak havoc until I pay

--there's little recourse for a lowly individual against an aggressive collection agency, or without hiring an aggressive attorney

 

I sent a certified letter denying responsibility for the bill and demanding proof that I owe the money. I found a good form letter online; the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act has all these requirements they have to follow, like they can't contact me by phone, only in writing when I request it.

 

Now it's time to wait and keep my fingers crossed :D

Sign in to follow this  


4 Comments


Recommended Comments

Eep! Sounds like you are taking the proper steps to alleviate the situation. If this *does* show up on your credit report(s), there is recourse for you short of the whole attorney thing.

 

I had to have a credit card collection investigated several years ago (one of my old roommates during my Springer Year used my SSN to get a platinum card - I mean, c'mon, a college student with a platinum card? So obviously ID fraud.) and had all the "charges" dropped.

 

It involved lots of phone calls with the collection agency and issuing bank (and a detective!) but no attorneys.

 

Good luck!

Share this comment


Link to comment

Yikes! That must have been some letter to open up and I couldn't imagine getting a letter like that all these years later. And something about it just seems odd to me, so I wouldn't send them any money. Not one single cent, because I can't believe that a company would wait all this time to collect $900. I think you did the right thing by sending the letter.

 

I hope everything works out.

Share this comment


Link to comment

I, too, have had something similar happen when I wanted to rent a house and got a copy of my credit report. Apparently someone stole my SSN when I was 16 and ordered about $300 worth of stuff to an address in Texas. All it took was a certified letter and it never showed up on my credit report.

Share this comment


Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×